RE: 2025 Bentley Bentayga Speed | PH Review

RE: 2025 Bentley Bentayga Speed | PH Review

Tuesday 17th June

2025 Bentley Bentayga Speed | PH Review

No longer a W12, now a pure V8 - with no hybrid assistance. The purists' performance SUV?


Before driving the new Bentley Bentayga Speed, my question for its engineering team was going to be simple: why isn’t it a hybrid? Not only does its pure petrol configuration buck the market trend, but also the prevailing approach of VW Group buddies with which Bentley shares some of its tech.  The Cayenne Turbo GT and Urus SE both soar past 700hp with the help of a plug, the latter using its electrical assistance for genuine dynamic flourishes.

Beside them, the new uber-Bentayga’s 650hp could, to the least rational among us, appear a touch meek. But with around 200 kilos less to shift than it would as a PHEV, its quoted performance figures are still nothing less than startling. It’s the first Bentayga Speed to slum it with eight rather than twelve cylinders and the first with four-wheel steering, too. Its 4.0-litre twin-turbo V8 produces its 627lb ft torque peak from just 2,250rpm and is good for a 193mph top speed (up 3mph on the old Speed) and 0-60mph in 3.4 seconds (down 0.4sec). 

The latter is best uncorked by Launch Control – a Bentayga first, and one of the many options unlocked by a £10,370 Dynamic Pack whose carbon-ceramic brake headline act boasts 440mm discs. Ticking that box is the only way to get 23-inch wheels and another Bentayga first, an ESC Dynamic mode which ‘permits exhilarating drift angles or power-on oversteer where appropriate’. All without an e-motor to cheat-code you into a slide like its Lamborghini cousin.

Its Bentley and Comfort drive modes remain the same as other Bentaygas, ensuring the Speed sacrifices none of their plushness, while Sport sharpens the steering, stiffens the suspension by 15 per cent and perks up the brake torque vectoring system, which allies with the variable 4WS and looser ESC to help pivot you into corners like no Bentley 4x4 before it. ‘[Our] engineers have created the most powerful and dynamic Bentayga ever,’ reads the bumf, ‘without losing an iota of what makes a Bentley, a Bentley.’ It’s with that in mind that I first potter out into the epic Montana scenery, focusing on its luxe credentials first and foremost.

The interior of a Bentayga has always stood out beside other Bentleys for some of its shared architecture with its German cousins; increasingly, though, it stands out for its steadfast use of physical switchgear, the car’s full decade since launch (!) acknowledged by some pleasingly traditional user interfaces. It’s an anachronism in all the right ways, and it's easy to condone when there’s still proficient tech tucked beneath it. There’s a fine line between espousing tradition and looking like a throwback, but this car treads it precisely. And thankfully Bentley’s engineers have no intention of giving up on buttons for whatever comes next…

Its instrument panel is digital, with fresh fonts and embellishments including newly patriotic ‘made in Britain’ flourishes. Bentley has no plan to outsource production from Crewe, and as Chinese carmakers flex ever bigger muscles to compete with European heritage, the Bentayga’s homemade claims are an evolving USP.

It lopes along effortlessly, its enlarged turbochargers making simple work of slip roads and overtakes with even the merest hint of throttle travel. While it does a decent job of ironing out road surfaces, it doesn’t isolate you from them entirely. The benefit of this slight tension is a newfound clarity to its steering and composure to its responses that many performance SUVs struggle to achieve even with a properly pummelling ride. The wheels tend to thump authoritatively over trickier bumps, though, and the standard 22s feel an easy recommendation over these optional 23s.

The start-up Bentley mode remains a lovely cover-all for daily driving, prioritising comfort without sacrificing focus, with a smoothly assertive calibration of its ZF transmission and just the right amount of lean allowed by its 48v anti-roll system. The V8 gurgles away in the background, its soundtrack deliciously present under an insistent throttle but politely ebbing away at all other times, not dissimilar to the storied W12 before it. Sport mode proves fun for short blasts – and it’s the only way to spark ESC Dynamic mode – but the ‘box inevitably clings onto its lower ratios, and the optional Akrapovic system is all too keen to crudely splinter the luscious landscape around you. It’s also cackle-out-loud fun when you’re in the mood for it, mind…

A mood Bentley was only too happy to indulge via a sprawling gravel course amidst a vast Montanan ranch, an appropriate terrain to test the voracity of this newly accommodating chassis. A looser surface perfectly demonstrates its inherently sorted balance alongside an alluring appetite for mischief – the balance of its 4WS shifts with the conditions and allied with the other tech on board, it helps point the nose at the apex with devilish haste. Especially if you’ve deliberately provoked the rear axle with a nice, eleventh-hour brake.

The Speed never shrugs off its weight, but a smooth, progressive steering rack relays an intuitive breakaway of its rear axle, and this is a laughably easy – and crucially fun – car to hustle along, its inescapable heft only exaggerating the mischief. The Urus SE did the same thing on Nardo’s gravel circuit with some complex hybrid coding; this car does it with brake torque vectoring and a baritone V8 solo. 

With my head now wrapped around where its limits lie, I lean harder on it back on tarmac, its swagger feeling surefooted but clearly dynamic when you’re in Sport. It feels pretty sorted in any mode, however, and is undeniably a nicer road car when it’s on smoother roads with the comfort amped up. 

Should you spend £7,740 on its titanium Akrapovic pipes? Well, it saves 12.5kg over the standard sports exhaust, despite doubling the tailpipe count, which is naturally small fry when it slices a 0.5% portion from a car’s kerbweight. I can see it being hard to resist for pure loutishness – Bentley predicts half of its US buyers will tick the box, and about a fifth of European orders – but a late-night ride home in the old titanium-piped Speed lingers in my memory for the sleep that eluded me as it buzzed fussily down the M6. If you’re specifying the plush 4+1 seat option to use your Bentayga as a part-time limo, it may be best avoided.

But this car has a ‘last of the last’ vibe, an admission recognised by Bentley engineering boss Dr. Matthias Rabe, who bought his own 991 GT3 Touring with that exact mindset. The exhaust is a flagrant extravagance, but so is a Bentley, full stop - a Dacia Bigster will do much the same objective job for a tenth of the cost. With the Akrapovic box ticked, this latest Speed is loud, silly, and won’t allow you to slip anywhere unnoticed. Perfect for the typical super-SUV crowd, then, and a moment of wistful joy from a brand whose carbon-neutral factory and typically forward-facing philosophy might otherwise have left cars like this behind. 

It is easily convincing enough for my original question on hybridisation to be replaced by a more interesting one: ‘when does the Continental GT get this powertrain?’ Matthias is a vision of professionalism even when cornered by a jet-lagged journo hyped-up on American kaw-fee, but the glint in his eye that accompanies a hushed ‘you’ll have to wait and see’ suggests a future Conti Supersports (or similar) ought to get a similarly unsullied V8. Recent spy shots suggest that may occur quite quickly; in fact, Bentley is probably keen to shoehorn in any ICE-only specials before the electrified grasp of its Beyond100+ strategy irrevocably tightens.

Fab as this car feels, pottering around in an exclusively petrol-powered Bentayga may strike some users as a guilty pleasure given the imposing scale of Bentley's luxury SUV - but experiencing the enveloping sound and dynamic prowess on display here in a lower, lighter, slinkier model ought to inspire pleasure full stop. 


SPECIFICATION | 2025 BENTLEY BENTAYGA SPEED

Engine: 3,996cc, V8 twin-turbo
Transmission: 8-speed automatic, all-wheel drive
Power (hp): 650@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 627@2,250-4,500rpm
0-62mph: 3.6sec
Top speed: 193mph
Weight: 2,466kg
MPG: TBC
CO2: TBC
Price: from £219,000

Author
Discussion

Mysstree

Original Poster:

533 posts

60 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
What Chav colour matched the interior with the exterior, thats a crime against vision.

daqinggregg

4,487 posts

143 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
I fully understand these are all about the ownership experience, I have no doubt they are wonderful car to own.

I should be going wow, a real instrument panel instead of a ‘tablet’ but no; it looks like a binnacle out of a 90’s Jaguar.

For something so plush, it looks a bit drab inside, with a hint of ‘Focus RS’ not a bad thing in a Focus, but a £219,000 SUV.

pycraft

1,080 posts

198 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
"The purists' performance SUV?"

A statement that feels as logical as "The fitness fanatic's large bowl of trifle." Damn, now I really fancy some trifle.

griffsomething

310 posts

175 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
daqinggregg said:
I fully understand these are all about the ownership experience, I have no doubt they are wonderful car to own.

I should be going wow, a real instrument panel instead of a tablet but no; it looks like a binnacle out of a 90 s Jaguar.

For something so plush, it looks a bit drab inside, with a hint of Focus RS not a bad thing in a Focus, but a £219,000 SUV.
Yep the basic hatchback spec of black everything isn’t helping it at all there. A lighter shade with some wood or engine turned aluminium and it d start to look more like its price tag.

Type R Tom

4,122 posts

163 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
pycraft said:
"The purists' performance SUV?"

A statement that feels as logical as "The fitness fanatic's large bowl of trifle." Damn, now I really fancy some trifle.
Yeah it's quite the oxymoron that!

ducnick

2,046 posts

257 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
griffsomething said:
Yep the basic hatchback spec of black everything isn t helping it at all there. A lighter shade with some wood or engine turned aluminium and it d start to look more like its price tag.
Horrific spec isn t it. On the plus side, checkout the instruments.. the digital screen at least attempts to look like circular boring functional dials and the thing has knobs and buttons to control the primary functionality. That s got to be it s USP amount it s VW group stablemates toureg, q7, cayenne and Lamborghini urine which are all less tactile to operate now. Just put real physical instrument dials back in, and it would be near perfect.

Edited by ducnick on Tuesday 17th June 08:12

DodgyGeezer

43,916 posts

204 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
these have really grown on me to the point I now really like them. The fact that Bentley have that gorgeous orange rather than the usual dull as ditchwater and utterly lacking in imagination black/white/grey is a massive plus - that said the interior is still 'somewhat' staid and, yup, black (I'd still be happy with it though)

DonkeyApple

62,318 posts

183 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
The key is that these don't have to be acquired in Dubai spec. These cars are also no longer SUVs but crossovers. They've been lowered so much to aid performance.

'Its instrument panel is digital, with fresh fonts and embellishments including newly patriotic ‘made in Britain’ flourishes. Bentley has no plan to outsource production from Crewe,'

It's not really 'made in Britain' the body, engine, drivetrain and pretty much everything are made outside of Britain. They then only ship them to the UK for final assembly and decorating because it helps the RRP to say so and the UK taxpayer gives VW free money every year to subsidise the wages.

And yet, despite being almost completely German bar the final decorations, it's still the most Bentley of Bentley's in living memory and the model most strongly following WO Bentley's original ethos.

AB

18,289 posts

209 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
They look better with each small step in evolution. No surprises I absolutely adore the colour of it and I think it looks fantastic, externally. Not so sure about the blue of the interior.

I wonder why they stuck with the V8 and no battery, unlike the new Continental GT Speed? Still, they've managed to make pretty nippy without.

In summary, that'd do me nicely.

NJJ

479 posts

94 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
They still have too much of a whiff of Audi Q7 about them. Lovely place to spend time once on board though.

AmyRichardson

1,717 posts

56 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
AB said:
They look better with each small step in evolution. No surprises I absolutely adore the colour of it and I think it looks fantastic, externally. Not so sure about the blue of the interior.

I wonder why they stuck with the V8 and no battery, unlike the new Continental GT Speed? Still, they've managed to make pretty nippy without.

In summary, that'd do me nicely.
They're certainly a lot better looking than the first generation, as per the Cayenne. In both cases it must have been hard transferring existing design cues onto an unfamiliar set of proportions and they've learned as they've gone along.

This does seem to come at the cost of all full-sized VW SUVs (Porsche, to an extent, excepted) visually merging. Granted this is a long way from "my Caddy is a Chevvy" style badge engineering, but they were more distinctive a decade ago.

fantheman80

1,967 posts

63 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
NJJ said:
They still have too much of a whiff of Audi Q7 about them. Lovely place to spend time once on board though.
Yeah I can see a VW in there with fancy lights

I think if I joined the turkey teeth brigade and parts of my wife became inflatable, id have to go for the Urus stablemate

nickchallis92

114 posts

100 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
I like it and i don't have to justify myself.

ChocolateFrog

31,645 posts

187 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
I think the exterior colour looks fantastic.

No need for the titanium exhaust, 23in wheels, and carbon ceramics so that's atleast £20k saved there.

So many options in the £200k super SUV segment now but this would have to be near the top for me, although you'd probably lose a whole lot less on a G63.

jay-kay-em

309 posts

218 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
"Purists" rofl

DonkeyApple

62,318 posts

183 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
AB said:
They look better with each small step in evolution. No surprises I absolutely adore the colour of it and I think it looks fantastic, externally. Not so sure about the blue of the interior.

I wonder why they stuck with the V8 and no battery, unlike the new Continental GT Speed? Still, they've managed to make pretty nippy without.

In summary, that'd do me nicely.
My guess would be that in the U.K., more than a few are not acquired via company schemes where there is a tax advantage and the V8 is LEZ and ULEZ complaint which would be the largest in use tax after fuel duty for the typical user. As such, all of that combines to meet the significant U.K. client age demographic for these.

The one positive thing Trump has done is to break the complete spell that mainstream manufacturers had been under where they were absolutely convinced that every product had to be as tax efficient and corporately compliant as possible for green washing.

Now all we need is some of them to find the balls to offer normally aspirated options so that we can have a last hurrah for the ICE heading into the 2040s. A fair few people would be over the moon to trade tax efficiency and ultimate power for the purest form of ICE experience.

ducnick

2,046 posts

257 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
griffsomething said:
Yep the basic hatchback spec of black everything isn t helping it at all there. A lighter shade with some wood or engine turned aluminium and it d start to look more like its price tag.
Horrific spec isn’t it. On the plus side, checkout the instruments.. they appear to be real dials and the thing has knobs and buttons to control the primary functionality. That’s got to be it’s USP amount it’s VW group stablemates toureg, q7, cayenne and Lamborghini urine which are all less tactile to operate now.

Lester H

3,430 posts

119 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
NJJ said:
They still have too much of a whiff of Audi Q7 about them. Lovely place to spend time once on board though.
Excellent for this category of car… lovely ‘kick back’ over rear wheel arch looks dynamic. The interior is probably attractive in reality with the blue highlights but the publicity phots ( if that’s what they are) are trying too hard to be moody. At the price of a very ordinary house ( outside London), not really relevant for most of us, but good that it exists.

J4CKO

44,283 posts

214 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
ChocolateFrog said:
I think the exterior colour looks fantastic.

No need for the titanium exhaust, 23in wheels, and carbon ceramics so that's atleast £20k saved there.

So many options in the £200k super SUV segment now but this would have to be near the top for me, although you'd probably lose a whole lot less on a G63.
Dont think buyers of these are in money saving mode by and large, not like they turn up with a 50p off coupon.

Screen looks suspiciously like the AliExpress one I just put in my ten year old Jag biggrin

ChocolateFrog

31,645 posts

187 months

Tuesday 17th June
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
ChocolateFrog said:
I think the exterior colour looks fantastic.

No need for the titanium exhaust, 23in wheels, and carbon ceramics so that's atleast £20k saved there.

So many options in the £200k super SUV segment now but this would have to be near the top for me, although you'd probably lose a whole lot less on a G63.
Dont think buyers of these are in money saving mode by and large, not like they turn up with a 50p off coupon.

Screen looks suspiciously like the AliExpress one I just put in my ten year old Jag biggrin
No but £50k a year for a couple of years before you've turned a wheel still sharpens the mind.